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To no one’s surprise, the overwhelming majority of people in this country do not like the crazy, extremist House GOP’s reckless handling of the ongoing default crisis. A CBS News poll came out today showing that only 21 percent of this nation backs the Republicans’ “handling” of default crisis-related negotiations. If the House GOP were led by rational actors who actually cared about the best interest of this country and operated on good faith, they would at this point drop their crazy posturing and get serious about accepting a deal that has already been tilted towards the right. But there is no chance. In fact, the House GOP is doubling down and ratcheting up the crazy. Last week they first trotted out a “balanced budget amendment” , which was basically a “Trojan horse to end Medicare” and other entitlement . Jon aptly described it as ” U.S. fiscal suicide ” back in March. They were making a lot of noise, hoping to bring that reckless piece of legislation to the floor this week. Well, they pulled the BBA off the docket late last week and instead are now planning to bring another dogmatic piece of wingnut legislation with the turd-polishing title of “cut, cap and balance” , which is described charitably by the Republico Politico as “a popular conservative plan to cut spending, balance the budget and put a cap on overall federal spending, the latest Republican attempt to lay down their marker in the debt ceiling debate.” The proposal currently has “little chance” of passing. This is nothing short of a cynical stunt to inject yet more Grover Norquist-blessed “ideologically extreme” policy points into the insane default crisis-related discussions. Let’s get into the craziness after the jump. As noted by Robert Greenstein from the Center on Budget and Political Priorities , this “cut, cap and balance” approach is more extreme than the crazy Paul Ryan plan that will end Medicare as we know it : The “Cut, Cap & Balance” measure cites three constitutional balanced-budget amendments (H.J. Res 1, S.J. Res 10, and H.J. Res 56) and states that Congress must approve one of them or a similar measure before the debt limit can be raised. All three of the cited proposals would require cuts deeper than those in the Ryan budget. All three measures would establish a constitutional requirement that total federal expenditures may not exceed 18 percent of GDP, and all three would essentially require that the budget be balanced within the coming decade. Mr. Greenstein also eviscerated the nonsense that the “cut, cup and balance” approach will not touch Social Security and Medicare : Talking points that the legislation’s proponents circulated on July 15 seek to foster an impression that the measure would protect Social Security and Medicare. Such an impression would not be accurate. The legislation would inexorably subject Social Security and Medicare to deep reductions. The measure does not cut Social Security or Medicare in 2012. And it does not subject them to automatic cuts if its global spending caps are missed. It is inconceivable, however, that policymakers would meet the bill’s severe annual spending caps through automatic across-the-board cuts year after year; if they did, key government functions would be crippled. Policymakers would have little alternative but to institute deep cuts in specific programs. And as noted elsewhere in this statement, before the debt limit could be raised, Congress would have to approve a constitutional balanced budget amendment that essentially requires cuts even deeper than those in the Ryan budget. Reaching and maintaining a balanced budget in the decade ahead while barring any tax increases would necessitate deep cuts in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. After all, by 2021, total expenditures for these three programs will be nearly 45 percent greater than expenditures for all other programs (except interest payments) combined. Big cuts in these programs would be inevitable. Moreover, because taxes — including payroll taxes — would be virtually impossible to raise as a result of the new constitutional barrier, Social Security solvency would have to be restored entirely through benefit cuts. Balanced Social Security packages that include measures to raise Social Security’s $106,000 payroll tax cap, so that higher-income Americans do not escape the tax on much of their earnings, would effectively be ruled out. Michael Linden from Center from American Progress added: The last time the United States had spending this low was in 1966. Much has changed since then, which makes a federal budget at that level both impractical and undesirable. We are an older country, with more retirees receiving the Social Security and Medicare benefits they’ve earned during their working lives. Social Security benefits have been consciously increased to improve the quality of life for retirees. Health care costs have multiplied so providing Medicare, veterans’ care, and Medicaid is much more expensive. Education has become more costly, and government fuel costs have risen along with everyone else’s. How ugly is this proposal. Even the White House has been out in front today issuing a veto threat (via email): The Administration strongly opposes H.R. 2560, the “Cut, Cap and Balance Act of 2011.” Neither setting arbitrary spending levels nor amending the Constitution is necessary to restore fiscal responsibility. Increasing the Federal debt limit, which is needed to avoid a Federal government default on its obligations and a severe blow to the economy, should not be conditioned on taking these actions. Instead of pursuing an empty political statement and unrealistic policy goals, it is necessary to move beyond politics as usual and find bipartisan common ground. The bill would undercut the Federal Government’s ability to meet its core commitments to seniors, middle-class families and the most vulnerable, while reducing our ability to invest in our future. H. R. 2560 would set unrealistic spending caps that could result in significant cuts to education, research and development, and other programs critical to growing our economy and winning the future. It could also lead to severe cuts in Medicare and Social Security, which are growing to accommodate the retirement of the baby boomers, and put at risk the retirement security for tens of millions of Americans. Furthermore, H. R. 2560 could require even deeper cuts, since it conditions an increase in the Federal debt limit on Congressional passage of a Balanced Budget Amendment. H. R. 2560 sets out a false and unacceptable choice between the Federal Government defaulting on its obligations now or, alternatively, passing a Balanced Budget Amendment that, in the years ahead, will likely leave the Nation unable to meet its core commitment of ensuring dignity in retirement. The statement of administration policy concluded that “if the President were presented this bill for signature, he would veto it.” So, keep an eye on this story, because no doubt the House GOP and their extremist cronies are going to push it from all directions. If anyone within the Village bubble treat this proposal as some kind of serious package, it shouldn’t be too difficult to blow it up with facts. Then again, given how these default-crisis negotiations have been played out in a field so far stacked to the right, one often wonders whether facts, reason, or logic have anything to do with politics these days in Washington. P.S. One last note for today. In case you missed it, you may want to read up this piece in the Washington Post about how some of the most “fervent” budget cutting “deficit hawks are Republicans who also spend the most taxpayer money to push their crazy, dogmatic, and tone-deaf right wing political ideas masqueraded as policy points.

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Icon of 1960s Design: Matti Suuronen’s Futuro House (Video)

In 2007, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, Netherlands came into possession of the prototype of a quite spectacular piece of architecture: Finnish architect Matti Suuronen’s Futuro, the “House of the Future”. With its distinctive flying saucer like shape Suuronen’s Futuro is an icon of 1960s design. It reflects the optimistic vision of the future and the utopian spirit of that time. In 1965, Matti Suuronen was commissioned to design a mobile holiday home that could be erected in poorly accessible skiing areas. The house had to be lightweight, easy to transport and deploy, and suitable for serial production. Suuronen came up with a design that consisted of two parts: the main body made of polyester, and a steel structure as a base. Originally, the idea was to transport the “portable playhouse” as a whole beneath a helicopter. The Futuro came in different colors such as white, yellow or light blue, and also varied regarding the design of the steel legs, and the number of windows. But the basic elliptic shape was always the same. According to Matti Suuronen, the form of the main body of the Futuro is based purely on mathematics, while the idea for the steel leg foundation came to him when looking at the eggcup on his breakfast table. When the Futuro was first presented at a fair in London in October 1968, there was great interest among the public. As a result the manufacturer, Polykem, decided to start mass production of the Futuro. The company even launched a whole series of prefabricated houses designed by Matti Suuronen. Unfortunately the oil crisis of 1973 thwarted the company’s plans and the production was halted prematurely. There are still a dozens of Futuros spread across the world. The Futuro hasn’t been always used according to its original purpose as ski cabin or normal leisure house. It has also been used as a bank, a restaurant, and as an exhibition space. Finally it became an art object itself. In 1990 the Finnish artist Jusi Kivi rented the prototype, Futuro no. 000, for one of his exhibitions. In 1996 it was the highlight of Belgian artist Carsten Höller’s exhibition at the Secession in Vienna. And the German advertising-designer, artist and photographer Charles Wilp put a Futuro on the roof of his house. Wilp invited many celebrities such as Andy Warhol, Joseph Beuys, Yves Klein and Mel Ramos to his Futuro, and wrapping artist Christo enclosed it with a plastic foil. The light blue-colored prototype of the Futuro is now on display for the first time after its restoration. The Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen currently showcases it as centerpiece of the exhibition “Futuro: Constructing Utopia,” which also presents twenty prints and approximately a hundred design objects from the museum’s collection. On the occasion of the opening of the exhibition VernissageTV met with Jonieke van Es, the Head of Collections & Research at Museum Bijmans Van Beuningen. In the video above, she talks about the history and concept of the Futuro, how the prototype came into possession of Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen and how it was restored, the Futuro’s relevance as a design icon, and its future use at the museum.

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Lindsey Graham compares America to Greece which is why he shouldn’t be taken seriously

Click here to view this media Sen. Lindsey Graham took a lot of heat from the Tea Party movement so he’s been trying to curry their favor ever since. He used to be considered part of John McCain’s “Maverick posse”, but since McCain denied that he ever was a maverick so he could bow down to the crazed right, it makes him look ridiculous. On the debt ceiling debate, Graham had an interesting conversation with Candy Crowley, who clearly is in a Grand Bargain kinda mood. Goober Graham is parroting the new Republican talking point of “Cut, Cap and Balance” (also known as the Ryan Plan 2.0 ) and had the audacity to compare us to Greece. Wow, is there any fear-mongering in those words ? Appearing on CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday, Graham said that Republicans would raise the debt ceiling only in exchange for the requirements in the “Cut, Cap and Balance” legislation the House is expected to vote this week. That bill would cut government spending to 2008 levels, cap sending for the next decade and require the passage of a balanced budget constitutional amendment. “For those three things, we’ll raise the debt limit,” Graham said. “That will be the Republican position in the House almost unanimously; I think it will be the Republican position in the Senate.” [..] “What is calamitous is the path we’re on as a nation,” he said. “We’re becoming Greece.” “Greece” is the new fear-mongering catch phrase much like ‘Saddam Hussein” was in 2002/3. The same scare tactics that lied to Americans and brought us into an unjust war with Iraq that Graham had no problems with paying for. The Balanced Budget Amendment is a joke , as every one knows. Graham lied to Crowley when he said that since he’s been in DC since 1995, it’s obvious to him that both parties are incapable of balancing the budget so we need a constitutional amendment. Crowley should have then reminded the big Goober that in 2000, when he was in Congress under Bill Clinton, the US had a surplus in our federal budget and that George Bush took the cash, gave it to his pals and led us into massive debt soon afterwards. But getting back to his Greece reference, here’s the Political Animal: New rule: every time a confused Republican lawmakers compare the United States’ fiscal conditions to that of Greece, an angel loses its wings. Look, the very idea is just crazy. The U.S. has extremely low interest rates and foreign investors are happy to loan us money; Greece has extremely high interest rates and no one is eager to loan the country money. The U.S. has our own currency; Greece has the Euro. We have a great credit rating (for now); Greece as an awful credit rating. We have a manageable debt; Greece has a debt crisis. We’re a large country with an enormous economy; Greece is a small country with a small economy. We have one of the world’s most stable systems of government (at least until six months ago); Greece’s government structure is a little shaky. For an elected American senator — and media darling — to tell a national television audience that the United States is “becoming Greece” is a clear signal: Lindsey Graham is not to be taken seriously on these issues. If Graham sincerely believes his own rhetoric, he has no idea what he’s talking about. If Graham is just playing some kind of cynical game, he’s a hack.

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Van Hollen: GOP wants constitutional amendment to end Medicare

Click here to view this media A top Democrat Sunday accused Republicans of demanding a balanced budget amendment to “manipulate” the Constitution and end Medicare as it exists today. “What is wrong with ‘cut, cap and balance’ and what are the chances it will get through the House, through the Senate and signed by the president?” Fox News’ Chris Wallace asked Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), the ranking Democrat on the House Budget Committee. “No one should be fooled about this,” Van Hollen said. “They’re not proposing a clean balanced budget amendment. What they are proposing is to manipulate the Constitution and use it to impose the Republican budget plan. He continued: “If you look at that plan, it does end the Medicare guarantee. It slashes Medicaid. It slashes deeply to education and it protects tax breaks for special interests. They would write that into the United States Constitution. Under their proposal, it would be easier to cut Medicare than to cut subsidies for oil and gas companies. You have majority vote to cut Medicare and majority vote to create special interest loopholes. You need two-thirds to close tax breaks. That is an anti-majoritarian position. The framers would be turning in their grave if they read their provision.”

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Van Hollen: GOP wants constitutional amendment to end Medicare

Click here to view this media A top Democrat Sunday accused Republicans of demanding a balanced budget amendment to “manipulate” the Constitution and end Medicare as it exists today. “What is wrong with ‘cut, cap and balance’ and what are the chances it will get through the House, through the Senate and signed by the president?” Fox News’ Chris Wallace asked Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), the ranking Democrat on the House Budget Committee. “No one should be fooled about this,” Van Hollen said. “They’re not proposing a clean balanced budget amendment. What they are proposing is to manipulate the Constitution and use it to impose the Republican budget plan. He continued: “If you look at that plan, it does end the Medicare guarantee. It slashes Medicaid. It slashes deeply to education and it protects tax breaks for special interests. They would write that into the United States Constitution. Under their proposal, it would be easier to cut Medicare than to cut subsidies for oil and gas companies. You have majority vote to cut Medicare and majority vote to create special interest loopholes. You need two-thirds to close tax breaks. That is an anti-majoritarian position. The framers would be turning in their grave if they read their provision.”

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Tea Party Congressman Asks Cokie Roberts: Why Does Compromise Always Mean Raising Taxes Now and Cutting Spending Later?

Cokie Roberts got quite a lesson Sunday on why compromise can be a dirty word in politics. When she asked Congressman Raul Labrador (R-Id.) why compromise isn't a “message that you hear,” the Tea Partier responded, “Why is it that compromise always means increasing taxes today and doing cuts in ten years from now?” (video follows with transcript and commentary): COKIE ROBERTS: Congressman, I'm curious though: how does it work politically to say that we won't raise taxes on billionaires, as the president keeps saying? CONGRESSMAN RAUL LABRADOR (R-IDAHO): Let's talk about this. The House majority, the House Republicans passed a budget that actually talked about reforming the tax system. We already agreed to that. We said that we want to make sure that we broaden the base which means getting rid of those loopholes and we want to lower the rates. The difference between the Republicans and Democrats is that the president wants to get rid of these loopholes just to increase spending. That's all he’s wanted to do. Everybody gives him credit right now for being the adult at the table. This is the man who came to congress and asked us to raise the debt ceiling without any spending cuts. This is the man who gave us a budget that didn't even get a single vote in the Senate, and now she's saying that he's “serious,” a serious deficit hawk. I think that's a joke. He has never been a deficit hawk. Moments later, Roberts pressed the issue: ROBERTS: When Congressman Labrador says, “We were elected to do something,” what I think the American people keep saying is, “You were elected to do something: to come together, to make compromises and make government work. And why isn't that a message that you hear? LABRADOR: Why is it that compromise always means increasing taxes today and doing cuts in ten years from now? I think that’s the problem the problem with the American people. The American people will not stand for that. I think we can do something, we can come to the table and actually work together. But it is pretty clear that the president is unwilling to, to not increase taxes. He's unwilling to do something serious. I want to know what his plan is. So far, we have no idea what his plan is. He has not put anything on the table. All he talks is, they have all used the same phrase: “grand compromise.” Because that's poll tested. Apparently the polls, people like that. But it doesn't mean anything. In response, Roberts perfectly illustrated Charles Krauthammer's point about how we now have a “completely compliant, pliant, supine press accepting every leak out of the White House”: ROBERTS: But in the meetings with Vice President Biden, lots of specifics were talked about. They have, they have, what is the number, Jon, $1.4 trillion in… Interesting. “Lots of specifics were talked about” – but she can't name any. Even more delicious, the ally whose assistance she sought helped make the Congressman's point: JONATHAN KARL, ABC NEWS: But as George points out, it’s only $2 billion in cuts until 2012… LABRADOR: Yes KARL: …which will never fly with these guys. $2 billion in cuts, but Roberts thinks it's $1.4 trillion. Maybe I should cut her some slack. She was only off by about 700,000 percent!

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That big debt ceiling deal just won’t die: Lawmakers are still working on an ambitious “grand bargain” that would hack as much as $5 trillion from the national debt over the next decade, reports the Washington Post . President Obama, House speaker John Boehner, and other congressional leaders have all voiced…

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Dalai Lama Visit: President Obama Meets Spiritual Leader, China Complains

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama held a White House meeting Saturday with the Dalai Lama, a fellow Nobel Peace laureate, hours after China called on the U.S. to rescind an invitation that could sour relations with Beijing. The Tibetan spiritual leader has been in Washington for an 11-day Buddhist ritual. Thousands of expatriate Tibetans joined a 76th birthday celebration Wednesday for the Dalai Lama, who’s just relinquished leadership of Tibet’s government-in-exile. The White House said the 45-minute private session in the Map Room showed Obama’s support for preserving Tibet’s culture and protecting human rights, as well reaffirming his belief that Chinese government should engage with representatives of the Dalai Lama to resolve their differences. A Chinese crackdown led the Dalai Lama to flee into exile in India in 1959. China says he’s welcome to return if he drops his separatist activities, accepts Tibet as an inalienable part of China and recognizes Taiwan as a province of China. Hours before the Dalai Lama’s arrival, the Chinese Foreign Ministry urged the White House to cancel the visit. “We firmly oppose any foreign official to meet with the Dalai Lama in any form,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in a statement posted on the ministry’s website. “We request the U.S. side to honor its serious commitment that recognizes Tibet as part of China and opposes Tibet independence,” Hong said. The White House kept the meeting low-key, closing it from the news media. It chose the Map Room for the visit instead of the Oval Office, which is reserved for visiting heads of state. The visit comes less than 10 days before U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is expected to visit the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen. Vice President Joseph Biden is also scheduled to visit China this summer, followed by a trip to Washington by his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping. Obama had been criticized by pro-Tibetan activists for putting off an invitation during the Dalai Lama’s stay in the capital. White House officials said the president’s schedule had been occupied with debt-limit negotiations with congressional leaders. Obama last met the Dalai Lama in February 2010.

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Speeding up the Afghan pull-out ‘risks UK lives’

David Cameron is today warned not to risk the lives of British soldiers by making an early withdrawal from Afghanistan. The warning comes in a report from the influential House of Commons Defence Committee. Operations in Afghanistan states that pulling out more than a few hundred support troops could undermine the international coalition’s strategy, while dangerously weakening those left behind. Following his visit earlier this month to Afghanistan, the Prime Minister announced the drawdown of a further 500 troops, cutting the total force numbers to 9,000 by September 2012. But the report claims that scope for any more British troop reductions is “necessarily limited” in the short term. “A…

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MPs condemn tactical mistakes that ruled out victory in Helmand

Damning report by defence committee singles out failures in manpower, intelligence and equipment that led to loss of lives The five-year British military campaign in southern Afghanistan has been woefully under-resourced and hampered by inadequate equipment, according to a damning report by MPs. The Commons defence select committee, which has been analysing UK operations in Helmand province since 2006, says that it was “unacceptable” British forces were handicapped by insufficient numbers, poor equipment and low-quality intelligence when the deployment began. For the first three years of the operation – during which 132 British personnel died and more than 2,000 were hospitalised in Helmand – victory was more or less unattainable given the levels of manpower, military vehicles available and knowledge of the enemy. The initial deployment of 3,500 solders into Helmand, of whom around 1,000 were infantry, was “not fully thought through”, the report says. James Arbuthnot, a former Conservative defence minister and chairman of the committee, said: “The force levels deployed throughout 2006, 2007 and 2008 were never going to achieve what was being demanded.” The report questions how the Ministry of Defence failed to anticipate that the presence of foreign troops in Helmand “might stir up a hornets’ nest”. The then defence secretary, John Reid, was famously reported as saying that he would have been happy if British forces had left Helmand “without a shot being fired”. By the end of 2008, however, British forces were expending almost four million bullets a year against an increasingly strident insurgency. The report also raises concerns that UK troops were in effect sent to tackle an enemy of which virtually nothing was known because available intelligence “was contradictory”. By the summer of 2006, military tactics dictated that individual platoons of about 30 soldiers were cornered in isolated towns, provoking an aggressive response from the surrounding Taliban. During August and September of that year, 27 soldiers were killed as the enemy launched repeated attacks against remote outposts. The committee’s first report on Afghanistan for more than a year also criticises the military’s failure to make clear the need for more resources. Representations to government are described as “inadequate at best”. As the conflict progressed, the MoD was criticised for failing to keep up with the evolving tactics of the Taliban, who switched from conventional warfare to guerrilla tactics involving suicide attacks and improvised explosive devices. In particular, a failure to provide bomb-proof vehicles and counter-IED support was a serious flaw that almost certainly cost British lives. The flimsy armoured vehicles first sent to Helmand – the Snatch Land Rover and armoured personnel carriers dating from the 1960s – offered minimal protection. “It took some time to get a suitably capable vehicle fleet into theatre. The MoD should prioritise the protection of personnel when considering the funding of such needs that emerge in the future,” the report says. Even now, it adds, British forces still lack sufficient helicopter numbers. A dispute in Whitehall over supplying 12 more Chinook helicopters to Helmand has yet to be settled. Looking ahead to Britain’s withdrawal from the province, MPs warn that the government’s room for manoeuvre is limited. Earlier this month David Cameron confirmed a “modest reduction” in British troops next year, probably by around 500. A further 400 are due to return home this year, leaving a core of 9,500 service personnel. Arbuthnot said: “The government’s clear determination to withdraw combat forces should not undermine the military strategy by causing the Afghan population to fear that the international coalition might abandon them or by allowing the Taliban and others to think that all they have to do is bide their time.” Afghanistan Defence policy James Arbuthnot Mark Townsend guardian.co.uk

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